| Literature DB >> 27011205 |
Abstract
According to World Health Organization (WHO) estimates, cancer is responsible for more deaths than all coronary heart disease or stroke worldwide, serving as a major public health threat around the world. High resolution magic angle spinning (HRMAS) magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) has demonstrated its usefulness in the identification of cancer metabolic markers with the potential to improve diagnosis and prognosis for the oncology clinic, due partially to its ability to preserve tissue architecture for subsequent histological and molecular pathology analysis. Capable of the quantification of individual metabolites, ratios of metabolites, and entire metabolomic profiles, HRMAS MRS is one of the major techniques now used in cancer metabolomic research. This article reviews and discusses literature reports of HRMAS MRS studies of cancer metabolomics published between 2010 and 2015 according to anatomical origins, including brain, breast, prostate, lung, gastrointestinal, and neuroendocrine cancers. These studies focused on improving diagnosis and understanding patient prognostication, monitoring treatment effects, as well as correlating with the use of in vivo MRS in cancer clinics.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; high-resolution magic angle spinning (HRMAS); magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS); metabolomics
Year: 2016 PMID: 27011205 PMCID: PMC4812340 DOI: 10.3390/metabo6010011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metabolites ISSN: 2218-1989
Figure 1In vivo PRESS TE 30 msec spectra (b,e,h) and their equivalent ex vivo HRMAS presaturation spectra (c,f,i) from a histopathologically verified astrocytoma grade II (a–c) and glioblastoma (d–f) showing unimodal variation of the grayscale pixel values in the voxel placement areas (a,d), and a histologically verified glioblastoma with multimodal variation of the grayscale pixel values (g–i). Major metabolite peaks have been labeled, but for clarity not all the metabolites have been labeled in each spectrum (Ala, alanine; Cr, creatine; Gln, glutamine; Glu, glutamate; Glx, (Gln + Glu); Gly, glycine; Ins, myo-Inositol; Lac, lactate; Lip/MM, lipids/macromolecules; Scyllo, scyllo-Inositol; Tau, taurine; tCho, total cholines) [13].
Figure 2Metabolomic profiles of 29 surgical samples of palpable breast cancer correlated to patients’ prognosis and health status after five years post-surgery leading to: (A) Score plot for PC2 and PC5; (B) loading plot of PC2; and (C) loading plot of PC5 resulting from a PCA of region 3.6–2.9 ppm of the area normalized MR spectra (n = 29). In the score plot, samples from patients with different prognosis are identified by different colors (red and blue), where patient status five years after surgery is identified by different signs. PC2 accounts for 18% of spectral variation, whereas PC5 accounts for 6% [33].
Figure 3PCA score plot (top) and loading plot for PC2 (bottom) from 1H HRMAS NMR t2-edited spectra for comparison between healthy myometrium and leiomyoma uterine tissues [37].
Figure 4Examples of HRMAS MR spectra of intact tissue and paired sera from the same patients with either SCC or AC of the lung. The tissue histopathology images obtained from the tissue samples after spectroscopic measurements are also presented. From these images, tissue pathologies were quantified [45].
Figure 5(a) PCA score plot showing the discrimination between thyroid lesions and their healthy counterpart tissues; (b) PC1 loadings plot showing the model coefficients for each NMR variable. Horizontal axis corresponds to the NMR chemical shift scale; vertical axis corresponds to the variable weights on PC1. The line variation corresponds to model covariance derived from the mean centered model, whereas the color map corresponds to the correlation coefficient derived from the unit-variance model. Significantly discriminant metabolites were annotated on the model coefficient plot [52].
Summary of observed metabolite changes after high resolution magic angle spinning (HRMAS) magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) in response to cancer type.
| Cancer | Reference | Observed Metabolic Changes |
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| [ | Lac↑, PChol↑, GPC↑, acetate↓, |
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| [ | Lac↑, phenylalanine (Phe)↑, tyrosine (Tyr)↑, serine (Ser)↑, lysine (Lys)↑, Tau↑, Gln↑, glutamate (Glu)↑, Ala↑, isoleucine (Ile)↑, leucine (Leu)↑, valine (Val)↑, lipids↓, Cho↓, PCho↓, |
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| [ | Tau↑, isoglutamine↑, Cho↑, Lac↑, Phe↑, Tyr↑, lipids↓, triglycerides↓ |
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| [ | PChol, glutamate,
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| [ | Tau↑, tCho↑ |
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